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Hindu–Muslim unity

Hindu–Muslim unity is a religiopolitical concept in the Indian subcontinent which stresses members of the two largest faith groups there, Hindus and Muslims, working together for the common good. The concept was championed by various persons, such as leaders in the Indian independence movement, namely Mahatma Gandhi and Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan,[1] as well as by political parties and movements, such as the Indian National Congress, Khudai Khidmatgar and All India Azad Muslim Conference.[2] Those who opposed the partition of colonial India often adhered to the doctrine of composite nationalism.[3]

Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan of the Khudai Khidmatgars and Mohandas Gandhi of the Indian National Congress both strongly championed Hindu–Muslim unity.

History

In Mughal India, the emperor Akbar advocated for Hindu–Muslim unity, appointing both Hindus and Muslims as officials in his court.[4] Akbar participated and promoted festivals of both Hinduism and Islam.[5] He also created feasts, such as Phool Walon Ki Sair (although this festival is said to have been started much later in the nineteenth century under Akbar II) to be celebrated by citizens of all faiths.[6]

Chhatrapati Shivaji also promoted Hindu–Muslim unity. Maratha Hindavi Swarajya had many Muslims in high posts. Shivaji's personal security, his most trusted courtiers, were Muslims. A Muslim general had led the Maratha troops in the third battle of Panipat and sacrificed for the cause.

Sayyid Jamal al-Din al-Afghani Asadabadi advocated for Hindu–Muslim unity, maintaining that it would help the Indian independence movement in their goal to establish an independent India.[7][8]

In the Indian Rebellion of 1857, many Hindus and Muslims of India mobilized together to fight against the East India Company.[9] Reflecting on this in 2007, Manmohan Singh stated that these events "stood as a great testimony to the traditions of Hindu–Muslim unity that held out as an example for subsequent generations".[9]

The Lucknow Pact of 1916 was seen as an "important step forward in achieving Hindu–Muslim unity" during the era of the Indian independence movement.[10] Muhammad Ali Jinnah advocated Hindu–Muslim unity in early years of his political career.[11] Gopal Krishna Gokhale stated that Jinnah "has true stuff in him, and that freedom from all sectarian prejudice which will make him the best ambassador of Hindu–Muslim Unity".[12]

Muslim scholars of the Deoband school of thought, such as Qari Muhammad Tayyib and Kifayatullah Dihlawi, championed Hindu–Muslim unity, composite nationalism, and called for a united India.[13] Maulana Sayyid Hussain Ahmad Madani, the leader of the Jamiat Ulema-e-Hind, stated:[14]

Hindu-Muslim unity is a prerequisite for freedom of India. It is the religious and political duty of the Muslims that they should work for the freedom of India and continue this struggle until the Government accedes to their demand. It is their duty, which they must do with or without companions, it is the order of the Almighty. If non-Muslims extend to you the hand of friendship, you too must extend yours, for compromising for the right cause will establish you as true believers in Allah.[14]

Malik Khizar Hayat Tiwana, the Premier of Punjab in colonial India, advocated for amity between the religious communities of undivided India, proclaiming March 1 as Communal Harmony Day and aiding in the establishment of a Communal Harmony Committee in Lahore, in which Raja Narendra Nath served as president and Maulvi Mahomed Ilyas as secretary.[15]

In 1940, Maghfoor Ahmad Ajazi established the All-India Jamhur Muslim League to support a united India and to counter the Lahore resolution, passed by the All-India Muslim League, for a separate Pakistan based on Muhammad Ali Jinnah's Two nation theory. He served as the first General Secretary of the All India Jamhur Muslim League.[16]

Threats to Hindu–Muslim unity

In the Indian Rebellion of 1857, many Hindus and Muslims in India joined together as Indians to fight against the British East India Company.[17] The British government became concerned about this rise in Indian nationalism therefore; according to some writers, they tried to stir up communalistic feelings among Hindus and Muslims so that they might not again unite to try and overthrow crown rule.[17] For example, Theodore Beck, the principal of Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College, had told Syed Ahmad Khan that Muslims should have no sympathy with the objectives of the Indian National Congress and "that Anglo-Muslims unity was possible, but Hindu–Muslims unity was impossible".[17]

The author of Composite Nationalism and Islam, Maulana Husain Ahmad Madani, a Deobandi Muslim scholar and proponent of a united India, argued that the British government were attempting to "scare Muslims into imagining that in a free India, Muslims would lose their separate identity, and be absorbed into the Hindu fold", a threat that "aim[ed] at depoliticizing the Muslims, weaning them away from struggle for independence."[17] In the eyes of Madani, support for a two-nation theory resulted in the entrenchment of British imperialism.[17]

In the same vein, Kashmiri Indian politician and Supreme Court judge Markandey Katju wrote in The Nation:[18]

Up to 1857, there were no communal problems in India; all communal riots and animosity began after 1857. No doubt even before 1857, there were differences between Hindus and Muslims, the Hindus going to temples and the Muslims going to mosques, but there was no animosity. In fact, the Hindus and Muslims used to help each other; Hindus used to participate in Eid celebrations, and Muslims in Holi and Diwali. The Muslim rulers like the Mughals, Nawab of Awadh and Murshidabad, Tipu Sultan, etc were totally secular; they organised Ramlilas, participated in Holi, Diwali, etc. Ghalib’s affectionate letters to his Hindu friends like Munshi Shiv Naraln Aram, Har Gopal Tofta, etc attest to the affection between Hindus and Muslims at that time. In 1857, the ‘Great Mutiny’ broke out in which the Hindus and Muslims jointly fought against the British. This shocked the British government so much that after suppressing the Mutiny, they decided to start the policy of divide and rule (see online “History in the Service of Imperialism” by B.N. Pande). All communal riots began after 1857, artificially engineered by the British authorities. The British collector would secretly call the Hindu Pandit, pay him money, and tell him to speak against Muslims, and similarly he would secretly call the Maulvi, pay him money, and tell him to speak against Hindus. This communal poison was injected into our body politic year after year and decade after decade..[18]

On the other hand, Ajay Verghese says that the conflicts between the Hindu-Muslim population existed long before arrival of the British to the Indian subcontinent; he says that in places where British had less influence (like the princely states), the number of communal riots was more frequent as compared to places which were directly under British rule (like British Indian provinces).[19]

See also

References

  1. ^ Bhave, Y. G. (1997). The Mahatma and the Muslims. Northern Book Centre. p. 39. ISBN 9788172110819.
  2. ^ Veeravalli, Anuradha (2016). Gandhi in Political Theory: Truth, Law and Experiment. Routledge. p. 84. ISBN 9781317130994.
  3. ^ Na, Abdullahi Ahmed An-Na'im; Naʻīm, ʻAbd Allāh Aḥmad (2009). Islam and the Secular State. Harvard University Press. p. 156. ISBN 978-0-674-03376-4. The Jamiya-i-ulama-Hind founded in 1919, strongly opposed partition in the 1940s now although this was accpetable for muslims but not hindus and all of the hindus started chanting under a flag of a white tiger "zarshan our only leader in the west let's all kill the rest" and was committed to composite nationalism.
  4. ^ Bahadur, K. P. (1990). Rasikapriya of Keshavadasa. Motilal Banarsidass. p. i. ISBN 9788120807341.
  5. ^ Bahadur, K.P. (1976). Selections from Rāmacandrikā of Keśavadāsa. Motilal Banarsidass Publishers. p. 1. ISBN 9788120827899.
  6. ^ Indian and Foreign Review, Volume 23. Publications Division of the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India. 1985. p. 82.
  7. ^ "AFḠĀNĪ, JAMĀL-AL-DĪN". Encyclopaedia Iranica. 22 July 2011. In Hyderabad 1880-81 Afḡānī published six Persian articles in the journal Moʿallem-e šafīq, which were reprinted in Urdu and Persian in various editions of Maqālāt-e Jamālīya. The three major themes of these articles are: 1. advocacy of linguistic or territorial nationalism, with an emphasis upon the unity of Indian Muslims and Hindus, not of Indian Muslims and foreign Muslims; 2. the benefits of philosophy and modern science; and 3. attacks on Sayyed Aḥmad Khan for being pro-British. On nationalism, he writes in "The Philosophy of National Unity and the Truth about Unity of Language" that linguistic ties are stronger and more durable than religious ones (he was to make exactly the opposite point in the pan-Islamic al-ʿOrwat al-woṯqā a few years later). In India he felt the best anti-imperialist policy was Hindu-Muslim unity, while in Europe he felt it was pan-Islam.
  8. ^ Aslam, Arshad (28 July 2011). "The Politics Of Deoband". Outlook. Much before Madani, Jamaluddin Afghani argued that Hindus and Muslims must come together to overthrow the British. Husain Ahmad would argue the same thing after five decades.
  9. ^ a b "'1857 revolt tribute to Hindu–Muslim unity'". Hindustan Times. 10 May 2007.
  10. ^ The Pearson CSAT Manual 2011. Pearson Education India. 2011. ISBN 9788131758304. An important step forward in achieving Hindu–Muslim unity was the Lucknow Pact, 1916.
  11. ^ WELL, IAN BRYANT (2005). AMBASSADOR OF HINDU–MUSLIM UNITY JINNAH'S EARLY POLITICS. Vanguard Books. ISBN 8178241447.
  12. ^ Wolpert, pp. 34–35.
  13. ^ MacLean, Derryl N. (2013). Cosmopolitanisms in Muslim Contexts. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 9780748656097.
  14. ^ a b McDermott, Rachel Fell; Gordon, Leonard A.; Embree, Ainslie T.; Pritchett, Frances W.; Dalton, Dennis (2014). Sources of Indian Traditions: Modern India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh. Columbia University Press. p. 457. ISBN 978-0-231-51092-9.
  15. ^ Talbot, Ian (1996). Khizr Tiwana, The Punjab Unionist Party and the Partition of India. Curzon Press. pp. 77, 303.
  16. ^ Ministry of Culture, Government of India. "Maghfoor Ahmad Ajazi". amritmahotsav.nic.in.
  17. ^ a b c d e Syeda, Lubna Shireen (2014), "Madani and Composite Nationalism", A study of Jamiat-Ulama-i-Hind with special reference to Maulana Hussain Ahmad Madani in freedom movement (A.D. 1919 – A.D.1947), Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Marathwada University/Shodhganga, pp. 207–211, 257–258, hdl:10603/54426
  18. ^ a b Markandey Katju. . The Nation. Archived from the original on 10 November 2013. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
  19. ^ Verghese, Ajay. "British Rule and Hindu-Muslim Riots in India: A Reassessment". Georgetown University. Retrieved 7 August 2020.

hindu, muslim, unity, religiopolitical, concept, indian, subcontinent, which, stresses, members, largest, faith, groups, there, hindus, muslims, working, together, common, good, concept, championed, various, persons, such, leaders, indian, independence, moveme. Hindu Muslim unity is a religiopolitical concept in the Indian subcontinent which stresses members of the two largest faith groups there Hindus and Muslims working together for the common good The concept was championed by various persons such as leaders in the Indian independence movement namely Mahatma Gandhi and Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan 1 as well as by political parties and movements such as the Indian National Congress Khudai Khidmatgar and All India Azad Muslim Conference 2 Those who opposed the partition of colonial India often adhered to the doctrine of composite nationalism 3 Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan of the Khudai Khidmatgars and Mohandas Gandhi of the Indian National Congress both strongly championed Hindu Muslim unity Contents 1 History 2 Threats to Hindu Muslim unity 3 See also 4 ReferencesHistory EditFurther information Ganga Jamuni tehzeeb In Mughal India the emperor Akbar advocated for Hindu Muslim unity appointing both Hindus and Muslims as officials in his court 4 Akbar participated and promoted festivals of both Hinduism and Islam 5 He also created feasts such as Phool Walon Ki Sair although this festival is said to have been started much later in the nineteenth century under Akbar II to be celebrated by citizens of all faiths 6 Chhatrapati Shivaji also promoted Hindu Muslim unity Maratha Hindavi Swarajya had many Muslims in high posts Shivaji s personal security his most trusted courtiers were Muslims A Muslim general had led the Maratha troops in the third battle of Panipat and sacrificed for the cause Sayyid Jamal al Din al Afghani Asadabadi advocated for Hindu Muslim unity maintaining that it would help the Indian independence movement in their goal to establish an independent India 7 8 In the Indian Rebellion of 1857 many Hindus and Muslims of India mobilized together to fight against the East India Company 9 Reflecting on this in 2007 Manmohan Singh stated that these events stood as a great testimony to the traditions of Hindu Muslim unity that held out as an example for subsequent generations 9 The Lucknow Pact of 1916 was seen as an important step forward in achieving Hindu Muslim unity during the era of the Indian independence movement 10 Muhammad Ali Jinnah advocated Hindu Muslim unity in early years of his political career 11 Gopal Krishna Gokhale stated that Jinnah has true stuff in him and that freedom from all sectarian prejudice which will make him the best ambassador of Hindu Muslim Unity 12 Muslim scholars of the Deoband school of thought such as Qari Muhammad Tayyib and Kifayatullah Dihlawi championed Hindu Muslim unity composite nationalism and called for a united India 13 Maulana Sayyid Hussain Ahmad Madani the leader of the Jamiat Ulema e Hind stated 14 Hindu Muslim unity is a prerequisite for freedom of India It is the religious and political duty of the Muslims that they should work for the freedom of India and continue this struggle until the Government accedes to their demand It is their duty which they must do with or without companions it is the order of the Almighty If non Muslims extend to you the hand of friendship you too must extend yours for compromising for the right cause will establish you as true believers in Allah 14 Malik Khizar Hayat Tiwana the Premier of Punjab in colonial India advocated for amity between the religious communities of undivided India proclaiming March 1 as Communal Harmony Day and aiding in the establishment of a Communal Harmony Committee in Lahore in which Raja Narendra Nath served as president and Maulvi Mahomed Ilyas as secretary 15 In 1940 Maghfoor Ahmad Ajazi established the All India Jamhur Muslim League to support a united India and to counter the Lahore resolution passed by the All India Muslim League for a separate Pakistan based on Muhammad Ali Jinnah s Two nation theory He served as the first General Secretary of the All India Jamhur Muslim League 16 Threats to Hindu Muslim unity EditIn the Indian Rebellion of 1857 many Hindus and Muslims in India joined together as Indians to fight against the British East India Company 17 The British government became concerned about this rise in Indian nationalism therefore according to some writers they tried to stir up communalistic feelings among Hindus and Muslims so that they might not again unite to try and overthrow crown rule 17 For example Theodore Beck the principal of Muhammadan Anglo Oriental College had told Syed Ahmad Khan that Muslims should have no sympathy with the objectives of the Indian National Congress and that Anglo Muslims unity was possible but Hindu Muslims unity was impossible 17 The author of Composite Nationalism and Islam Maulana Husain Ahmad Madani a Deobandi Muslim scholar and proponent of a united India argued that the British government were attempting to scare Muslims into imagining that in a free India Muslims would lose their separate identity and be absorbed into the Hindu fold a threat that aim ed at depoliticizing the Muslims weaning them away from struggle for independence 17 In the eyes of Madani support for a two nation theory resulted in the entrenchment of British imperialism 17 In the same vein Kashmiri Indian politician and Supreme Court judge Markandey Katju wrote in The Nation 18 Up to 1857 there were no communal problems in India all communal riots and animosity began after 1857 No doubt even before 1857 there were differences between Hindus and Muslims the Hindus going to temples and the Muslims going to mosques but there was no animosity In fact the Hindus and Muslims used to help each other Hindus used to participate in Eid celebrations and Muslims in Holi and Diwali The Muslim rulers like the Mughals Nawab of Awadh and Murshidabad Tipu Sultan etc were totally secular they organised Ramlilas participated in Holi Diwali etc Ghalib s affectionate letters to his Hindu friends like Munshi Shiv Naraln Aram Har Gopal Tofta etc attest to the affection between Hindus and Muslims at that time In 1857 the Great Mutiny broke out in which the Hindus and Muslims jointly fought against the British This shocked the British government so much that after suppressing the Mutiny they decided to start the policy of divide and rule see online History in the Service of Imperialism by B N Pande All communal riots began after 1857 artificially engineered by the British authorities The British collector would secretly call the Hindu Pandit pay him money and tell him to speak against Muslims and similarly he would secretly call the Maulvi pay him money and tell him to speak against Hindus This communal poison was injected into our body politic year after year and decade after decade 18 On the other hand Ajay Verghese says that the conflicts between the Hindu Muslim population existed long before arrival of the British to the Indian subcontinent he says that in places where British had less influence like the princely states the number of communal riots was more frequent as compared to places which were directly under British rule like British Indian provinces 19 See also EditMadani Iqbal debate Composite nationalism Gandhism Ganga Jamuni tehzeeb Hindu Islamic relations Opposition to the partition of India Phool Walon Ki Sair SwarajReferences Edit Bhave Y G 1997 The Mahatma and the Muslims Northern Book Centre p 39 ISBN 9788172110819 Veeravalli Anuradha 2016 Gandhi in Political Theory Truth Law and Experiment Routledge p 84 ISBN 9781317130994 Na Abdullahi Ahmed An Na im Naʻim ʻAbd Allah Aḥmad 2009 Islam and the Secular State Harvard University Press p 156 ISBN 978 0 674 03376 4 The Jamiya i ulama Hind founded in 1919 strongly opposed partition in the 1940s now although this was accpetable for muslims but not hindus and all of the hindus started chanting under a flag of a white tiger zarshan our only leader in the west let s all kill the rest and was committed to composite nationalism Bahadur K P 1990 Rasikapriya of Keshavadasa Motilal Banarsidass p i ISBN 9788120807341 Bahadur K P 1976 Selections from Ramacandrika of Kesavadasa Motilal Banarsidass Publishers p 1 ISBN 9788120827899 Indian and Foreign Review Volume 23 Publications Division of the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting Government of India 1985 p 82 AFḠANi JAMAL AL DiN Encyclopaedia Iranica 22 July 2011 In Hyderabad 1880 81 Afḡani published six Persian articles in the journal Moʿallem e safiq which were reprinted in Urdu and Persian in various editions of Maqalat e Jamaliya The three major themes of these articles are 1 advocacy of linguistic or territorial nationalism with an emphasis upon the unity of Indian Muslims and Hindus not of Indian Muslims and foreign Muslims 2 the benefits of philosophy and modern science and 3 attacks on Sayyed Aḥmad Khan for being pro British On nationalism he writes in The Philosophy of National Unity and the Truth about Unity of Language that linguistic ties are stronger and more durable than religious ones he was to make exactly the opposite point in the pan Islamic al ʿOrwat al woṯqa a few years later In India he felt the best anti imperialist policy was Hindu Muslim unity while in Europe he felt it was pan Islam Aslam Arshad 28 July 2011 The Politics Of Deoband Outlook Much before Madani Jamaluddin Afghani argued that Hindus and Muslims must come together to overthrow the British Husain Ahmad would argue the same thing after five decades a b 1857 revolt tribute to Hindu Muslim unity Hindustan Times 10 May 2007 The Pearson CSAT Manual 2011 Pearson Education India 2011 ISBN 9788131758304 An important step forward in achieving Hindu Muslim unity was the Lucknow Pact 1916 WELL IAN BRYANT 2005 AMBASSADOR OF HINDU MUSLIM UNITY JINNAH S EARLY POLITICS Vanguard Books ISBN 8178241447 Wolpert pp 34 35 sfn error no target CITEREFWolpert help MacLean Derryl N 2013 Cosmopolitanisms in Muslim Contexts Edinburgh University Press ISBN 9780748656097 a b McDermott Rachel Fell Gordon Leonard A Embree Ainslie T Pritchett Frances W Dalton Dennis 2014 Sources of Indian Traditions Modern India Pakistan and Bangladesh Columbia University Press p 457 ISBN 978 0 231 51092 9 Talbot Ian 1996 Khizr Tiwana The Punjab Unionist Party and the Partition of India Curzon Press pp 77 303 Ministry of Culture Government of India Maghfoor Ahmad Ajazi amritmahotsav nic in a b c d e Syeda Lubna Shireen 2014 Madani and Composite Nationalism A study of Jamiat Ulama i Hind with special reference to Maulana Hussain Ahmad Madani in freedom movement A D 1919 A D 1947 Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar Marathwada University Shodhganga pp 207 211 257 258 hdl 10603 54426 a b Markandey Katju The truth about Pakistan The Nation Archived from the original on 10 November 2013 Retrieved 29 January 2019 Verghese Ajay British Rule and Hindu Muslim Riots in India A Reassessment Georgetown University Retrieved 7 August 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hindu Muslim unity amp oldid 1095889678, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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